
The short answer: on a 5-day Komodo trip, a shared
(open-trip) boat is the value play for solo travellers and couples at
roughly USD 550–1,200 per person, while a private charter becomes the
smarter buy from about 5–6 people — because charters price by the boat,
the per-person cost crosses under shared-cabin rates right around that
group size, and you gain full control of the route. After 300+
departures of the 5-day Komodo trip since 2016 — roughly
half open trips, half charters — here is the decision math I walk every
inquiring group through.
The Two Models, Precisely
- Shared / open trip: you book a cabin on a scheduled
departure; the operator fills the boat (typically 8–16 guests). Fixed
itinerary, fixed dates, per-person pricing. Meals and the standard route
included. - Private charter: you take the whole boat — crew,
cook, route and all. Priced per boat per night. Within park rules and
tide windows, the itinerary bends to you: skip a stop, double the manta
time, anchor for a beach barbecue.
Both run the same waters and, on our shortlist, the same class of
inspected phinisi. The differences are control, privacy, and the
arithmetic below.
The 2027 Numbers
Real market ranges for 5-day/4-night trips out of Labuan Bajo (our
full boat-by-boat tables live on the best boats comparison
page):
Shared, per person:
- Budget open trip (shared bunks): USD 550–800
- Mid-range (private double cabin, AC): USD
900–1,400 - Premium shared departures (boutique phinisi): USD
1,500–2,500
Private charter, per boat per night (multiply by 4
nights):
- Simple 3–4 cabin phinisi: USD 900–1,500/night → USD
3,600–6,000 for the trip - Mid-range 4–6 cabin: USD 1,800–3,500/night → USD
7,200–14,000 - Luxury phinisi: USD 4,000–12,000+/night → USD
16,000–48,000+
The break-even table (mid-range charter at USD 8,800
total vs mid-range shared at USD 1,150 pp):
| Group size | Charter per person | Shared per person | Winner |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2 | USD 4,400 | USD 1,150 | Shared, easily |
| 4 | USD 2,200 | USD 1,150 | Shared on price |
| 6 | USD 1,467 | USD 1,150 | Getting close |
| 8 | USD 1,100 | USD 1,150 | Charter wins |
| 10 | USD 880 | USD 1,150 | Charter, clearly |
The crossover sits at 6–8 people for mid-range boats, and as low as 5
for simpler vessels. Families and friend groups above that line should
almost never book shared cabins.
Note that park fees are per person regardless of boat model. Komodo
National Park entrance and activity fees are set by government
regulation and published by the park authority — budget roughly IDR
400–500k per person for a multi-day visit at current published rates,
and verify current figures on the official park site before travel
(source: Komodo National Park
official site). Our quotes itemise these so you can check them line
by line.
What You Actually Buy With
a Charter
Price parity is only half the story. The charter premium buys four
things the brochure undersells:
- Clock control. On a shared boat, sunrise on Padar
happens at the group’s pace. On a charter, we can put you on the summit
40 minutes before the first day boats — the single biggest experience
difference on the whole route. - Route flexing. Kids melting down? Add a beach
afternoon. Divers in the group? Extend Manta Point. Shared trips can’t
reshuffle; charters do it daily at the captain’s briefing. - Cabin truth. You know exactly who’s aboard. The
lottery of shared trips — the honeymooners, the stag group, the
influencer with a drone — is the most common complaint I hear from
guests who booked open trips elsewhere. - Provisioning to your taste. The cook shops your
list: dietary requirements, better coffee, your wine.
Where Shared Trips Genuinely
Win
Honesty cuts both ways. Shared departures are not just “charters for
poor people”:
- Solo travellers and couples get the 5-day
experience at a fraction of charter cost — and the best mid-range open
trips we place guests on are well-run, well-fed, and sociable in a good
way. - Fixed scheduled departures make flight planning
simple. - The social layer is a feature for many. A
meaningful share of our repeat charter clients met on a shared Komodo
boat years earlier.
The failure mode to avoid is the ultra-cheap dock-sold open trip: 16
bunks, one toilet, thin provisioning, no tide discipline. That product
generates most of the horror reviews attributed to “Komodo boats”
generally. The gap between a bad shared boat and a good one is far wider
than the gap between a good shared boat and a charter.
Decision Rules I Give Guests
- 1–2 travellers, flexible dates: mid-range shared
cabin. Spend the savings on the better cabin class. - 3–4 travellers: shared on price, charter if the
four of you value privacy and schedule control — a simple-phinisi
charter at USD 3,600–6,000 split four ways is USD 900–1,500 each, inside
mid-range shared territory. - 5–7: run the math on the actual boat; this is the
crossover zone. Usually charter. - 8+: charter, always. Cheaper per head and
immeasurably better. - Families with young kids: charter regardless of
size if budget allows — route flexibility around nap-and-meltdown
reality is worth the premium. - Seasickness worriers: bigger hull beats boat model;
see cabin-position notes in our seasickness guide.
Get the Real Quote, Not the
Range
Ranges are honest, but your answer depends on dates, boat
availability, and group makeup. Tell me those three things on the inquiry page and I’ll send both numbers — the best
shared-cabin option and the charter split — side by side, with the boats
named. Or WhatsApp me at wa.me/6281139414563; the
private-or-shared question is a two-message conversation with real
figures.
Yohanes “Jo” Rangga has designed the 5-day Komodo route since
2016 — 300+ departures across shared phinisi and private charters. He
inspects and re-shortlists the boat fleet every season, and publishes
the comparison on the best-boats page.